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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Jo Stafford published by this site and its partners.

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    Mar 23, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. Movie review: Rachel Weisz a passionate force in 'Deep Blue Sea'

    "The Deep Blue Sea" shows us where love has gone, reveals the dark and despairing places where ardor has shipwrecked and run aground. Exceptionally well-made and completely fearless in its depiction of the widest range of romantic emotions, this is a film as fiercely committed to passion as its heroine, and that's saying a lot.
    "The Deep Blue Sea" shows us where love has gone, reveals the dark and despairing places where ardor has shipwrecked and run aground. Exceptionally well-made and completely fearless in its depiction of the widest range of romantic emotions, this is a film...

    Tags: Concerts, Samuel Barber, Barbara Jefford, Midnight in Paris (movie), Terence Davies

  2. Aug 2, 2010 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  3. Mitch Miller dies at 99; musical innovator and host of 'Sing Along With Mitch'

    Mitch Miller, who helped shape musical tastes in the 1950s and early '60s as the head of the popular music division at Columbia Records and hosted the hit "Sing Along With Mitch" TV show in the early '60s while becoming one of the era's most commercially successful recording artists, has died. He was 99.
    Mitch Miller, who helped shape musical tastes in the 1950s and early '60s as the head of the popular music division at Columbia Records and hosted the hit "Sing Along With Mitch" TV show in the early '60s while becoming one of the era's most...

    Tags: Vic Damone, Charlie Parker, Frankie Laine, Ava Gardner, LAT WofF 20100708

  4. Mar 30, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  5. 'The Deep Blue Sea': Hushed, deft adaptation resonates ✭✭✭ 1/2

    The Liverpool-bred writer-director Terence Davies is best known for deeply felt, meticulously controlled reveries "The Long Day Closes" and "Distant Voices, Still Lives" and the gorgeous personal essay "Of Time and the City." Now 66, he sees the past — his own and his country's — as a war between oxygen-depriving conformity and what another Terence called "the whole of life," in all its terror and wonder.
    The Liverpool-bred writer-director Terence Davies is best known for deeply felt, meticulously controlled reveries "The Long Day Closes" and "Distant Voices, Still Lives" and the gorgeous personal essay "Of Time and the City." Now 66, he sees the past...

    Tags: Joe Wright, Samuel Barber, Midnight in Paris (movie), Terence Davies, Atonement (movie)

  6. Mar 15, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  7. Plumbing the 'ravishing' depths of 'Deep Blue Sea' with Terence Davies

    "Ravishing" is the preferred descriptor deployed conversationally, with passsionate, gale-force emphasis, by the Liverpool-bred writer and director Terence Davies.
    "Ravishing" is the preferred descriptor deployed conversationally, with passsionate, gale-force emphasis, by the Liverpool-bred writer and director Terence Davies. Earlier this week the 66-year-old Davies came through town on a promotional tour in...

    Tags: Samuel Barber, Douglas Sirk, Terence Davies, Music Box Theatre, Human Interest

  8. Aug 25, 2011 |Column| Orlando Sentinel
  9. 'What's My Line?' When the famous were really famous

    I don't remember now why I got onto YouTube the other day, but, by accident, I happened onto clips from ancient "What's My Line?" shows from the '50s and '60s. The series was on for 25 seasons, and each segment featured a mystery celebrity whom the...

    Tags: Celebrity Parents, Lena Horne, Ava Gardner, Jack Benny, Ethel Barrymore

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